Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 21, 1925, Page 6

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we PAGE SIX Che Casper Daily Tribune World Topics Sir Hugh ‘Trenchard, chief of By J. E. HANWAY AND EB. &. GANWAY ‘The Casper Dal Tribune every Sunday at Ca ered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matter November 1916. Tribune {ssued ever: per, Wyon opposite Butidin toffice. Business Telephones ..-. The Associated Press all Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting Al} Departments, evening and The Sunday Morning Publication offices, Tribune | -15 and 16 Brits ns alr staff, recently expressed wish that airplanes could be d altogether. They add too to the horrors of war, he “The airplane is the most offen- sive weapon that has ever «been invénited,”” but it is a shockingly bad weapon: of defense. Still it is the only de- ME SIATED PRESS IBER THE exclu news credited in this paper und entitled to the use for publication of Iso the local news published herein. | a tensive »weapon | against other i 4 . ‘airplanes “that Prudden, King & Prudden, 3 Steger Bldg., Chicago, 0 286 Fifth ri Ave. New York Cit e Boston, Mass; Suite 404 Sharon Bldx., Lee ice? eid 55 New Montgomery Francisco, Cal. Copfes of the Daily Tribune atts sat ° sit e ew rh Chi: 30sto f: 8. Pre be are on file in the New York, Chicago, Boston and San ‘Francisco offices Ee aee ee d 's are welcome. whether. any 1 of Circulation (A. B. ©.) Member of Audit Bure Advertising Representatives Six Three Months, Daily and One Month, On Three One Month, Daily One Year, Sunday = All subbscriptions must be pafa in adve SUBSCRIPTION RAT By Carrier and Outside State Year, Daily and Sund months, Daily and Sund ES Daily and S e Year, § ay on By Mont! he Datly 1 insure deliv: ne month tn arrears It YOUR TRIBUNE KICK, If YOU DON'T GET you don't find your Tribune afte 20kIr it will be delivered to you b: senger, $7.80 8.5C | fee) it pune will not g carefully for it call 1$.or 16 | Br ’ Register complaints | has yet been discovered, . and even in these days. of. ecien- other weapon take = its re. for an: hundred. years.’ an -alsman, I }do not upon ‘the air’ as a blessing ther. It nay’ te mote of a g to this empire than to any gy | other country ‘inthe world, but I 4.90 | feel t 1 the good ft will ‘do in life cannot / balance’ the harm be done in war by it. 1 an infinitely more harmful pon of war than any other and, had. the casting vote, I would ‘Abolish the air altogether’. uling -with:the air defense of in, he-says, “In the ‘event of vother war in'which this: country tom if t Lefore 8 + ‘clock is “serfously: ‘attaéked “by” an! alr ~ - +A— | power the grext problem ‘tobe faced rat Siete s that,in. the first) clash, of | the a opposing forces the casualties will = = be very high, and the question of : . replacing .reseryés. will be exoeed- Noise and Tnterruption | ingly difficult; im fact it will ‘be Very interesting is a small dispatch in the newspapers re- | most Insuperable not only \for this porting the death of one Fred Stoltenberg, a Milwaukee artist, | 74ton but. for any other nation) The world was too noisy for him so he killed himself, Very Par pte cn ay Sper often noise makes many of us want to commit murder but us Red ete ies cuted ually on someone else. ‘lo the person of fine sensibiliti no adequate defense, 1f you like an artist, noise is a torture. To many of us noise is a | reckon that in one day more tons cruel and undeserved punishment. And the world is getting of bombs could be dropped on this noisier constantly | country than-were dropped on it in There people who are not sensitive to noise. Very | the four-sears.that- the ‘great ‘war often they arc people who arc not sensitive to argument,.or | #4 thonghi, or poetry, or art, in a word, to any kind of intellectual influer The reason for it is that the tissue of their brains is of a very rough and course quality. Most of the world’s. great | personages have complained of noise, and desired peace and Next in-line. for.chief« of staff quiet, regardless of the importance of their contemplations. | of the arm; en. Dennis -B. he favorite explanation offered by one such personage for his aeaea Recently, promoted © to ithe aversion to nvise was, that. “Lf you cut up a large diamand into Pelle Of therigenieral, he: sicepadad little bits, it will entirely lose the value it had as a whole; came chief of-staff when. Gen. John an army divided into smeil bodies of soldiers, loses all J. Pershing re- strength.” tired. So a great intellect sinks to the level of an ordinary one as Dennis. Ed- soon as it is interrupted and disturbed, its attention drawn off ward Nolan was the matter in hand, for its superiority depends upon its power | horn in» Akron, of concentration—of bringing all its strength to bear upon Se Bo pat one theme, in the same way as a concaye mirror collects’ into Seis Ung paced one point all the rays of light that strike upon it. the United Noise is a hindrance jo this concentration. That is why States military distingflished minds have ays shown such an extreme dis: academy in like to disturbance in any form, as something that 1896, and. was breaks in upon and distracts their thoughts. Above all | married: to, Julla they have been averse to that violent interruption that comes from noise. It is a hundred p ran to put forward gan. Why not—*Neyer int Noise is the most impertinent of all forms. of interrup tion. It is not only an interruption, but also a disruption of thought. Pie It is learned from Mr. R. H. Shaw, nutrition expert for the American baking ion t pie is real food. We have Jong suspected as much and were only awaiting author: itative confirmation, Mr. Shaw assures us that it is so nutri- tious that instead of using it as « dessert as we haye been, all these years, we should eat it first, in the place where we have soup, fish and meat courses. By the time we reach pie on tlie old schedule, we haye had as much food as the body requires and do not get the good that abounds in.pie. In the order of their relative values in nutriment, Mr. Shaw names, custard, pumpkin, squash and sweet-potato pies. In his dissertation upon the pie Mr. Show admits that there are pies, and then pies. And it requires both skill and art to build a satisfactory pie. Bum artists have no business trifling with the red materials employed in pie coustruction. He especially warns against railroad pie and the pie mother used to make, associ: Other Burning Questions Notwithstanding the furore created in Tennessee over the subject of evolution by the passing of a statute forbidding the teaching of the subject in schools and colleges, the prosecution of a country schoolteacher for violating the law, the sensa tional court trial of the case, not to speak of the cdlumns of rot perpetrated in the name of science, emanating from tlie village where the whole fuss was kicked up, text-book pub lishers do not contemplate the slightest change in the text of any book dealing with the subject. Now that evolution has ceased to engage public inter. est, the world might see what it can do about the solution of couple other burning questions, namely and to-wit Who smote William Patterson? And the establishinent of the female named Ann, A fant ish People Eleven, thousand murders in the United States in. 1924, And not one in 200 of the perpetrators paid the death penalty. Probably two-thirds of them went free. We are a sentimental people. We are strong for mer« Mercy for those who kill. And by our mercy for the guilty we encourage the slaying, of 11,000 innocents in this country in a year. We make countless laws. We regulate personal conduct to the nth degree. We make possession of empty whisky bottles a crime. And then correct age of a ¢ when we catch a murderer and conyict him, lacking ‘ational exeuse for leniency we invent a new kind of disease, solemnly say he has it and so save his precious neck. We. cover the pages of our statute books with unenforceable acts, give our people a libe 1 education in contempt for all law, cram our jails full of petty violators, and then when confronted with the logical consequence of the whole mess we free our mur derers and armed bandits in herds Speed of Ri fle Bullets By working out electrically timed photographic apparatus, the bureau of standards has been enabled to take a new series of photographs of rifle bullets and time the release of gas and sound waves from the weapons used, Photographs are made by the light of an electric spark which has, roughly, a duration of a millionth of a second, it thus being possible to get ‘a num ber of entirely separate pictures of each bullet though speed. ut the rate of 2,700 feet a second. One of the theories to fall is that the speed of a bullet increases for some distance.after its emergence from the muzzle, due to the explosive gases in its rear, but the photographs show the projectiJe drawing swiftly away from the gas within a few inches from the muzzle, That price manipulation of coffee under the Brazilian yal- orization scheme has cost consumers in the United States $8: 400,000 in the last year, the price having been increased forty- four and one-half per cent, despite marked decrease in con- sumption i merce, the statement made by th epartment of com Grant Sharp of | J Duluth, Minn., | x Jin 1901, He | DennisE.Nolen served as an of- | Co Maan ficer through {the Spanish‘American yar, pare | tictpating in the battle of ElCaney, |was aide de camp to Brig. Gen. | Chambers MeKibben at’ ‘Santiago, | Cuba, and-at-Montauk Point, N.Y, He was recofimended for’ brevets of first Heutenant~ and captain, U.S. Ai, for services in the Spanish- American war. Nolan: did duty, in the Philippines in 1961°02 and 1906-11, and In Alaska, 1912-13. He arrived in France on July 9, 1917, and was with the gen- eral staff corps of the A, E. F. from 1917-19, and chief of the Intelligence vice, A, B.‘F., untit demobiliza- | tion. He ‘commanded the 65th brigade, 38th division, In Argonne Meuse offensive. He was given the D..S. Mojn ‘1918 “for organizing and administering the Intelligence Ser- vite," andsthe D./8: Cy “for conduct in action’ at Apremont, also’ the Croix de Guerre) with palm from the'French,© * arch 6, 1821, he was made general of the regular Now: comes his. promption to -majorgeneral Community Adver- tising The tremendous advertising. cam- | paign. put.on. by.sevéral, different sections.of the country, fon the frank purpose of attracting. business and population, to these sections ‘has created nation-wide ‘iriterest among business men, It° is therefore of tin si Homent to hear niore diréct from athority | directly neéerned someth concerning | community advertising. Mr. R. W, Pearman, executive secretary of the nford, Fla., Chamber, of ‘Com- | mereey says: this: | . !Community. advertising as known today isa. relatively’ new. deyelop- njent ‘but is imaking | tremendous strides ahd a number of nationally kriown advertising agencies are giv- ing much attention to this phase/ot niodérn advertising. California ‘was the first, we believe, to deyelop com. and with adequate follow-up, but just now Florldaswith over, $2,000,080 raised. or, appropriated for . com: munity. advertising. this year will test its power on’the greatest scale ever attempted. ‘o illustrate the spirit ef Florida _ HOTEL San Francisco munity: advertising on a’ big. acale | be Casper Daily Cribune ‘A good, busines's man’ has to. be something of a prophet. ‘He must cultivate the habit of looking ahead, harden himself in the ‘habit of thin! ing straight from cause to effect, The next ten or twenty, years Will witness. far-reaching changes in the methods and machinery of both pro- duction and distribution. The suc- cess or failure of every business man We have not ds yet made a real study’ of the! American’ Businces mind. 'Ié it possible to ‘formulate rules for the achievement of sticcess’ in husi- ness? i What, for instance, makes.a busi- ness man usually more, conservative than he-noeds to. bet, Why Is it so widely assumed that to be-reeetionary{s to be practical, and that to be progressive is to be visionary : 1 Just how efficient is the repyted efficiency of the American business man? ; (Why do’ the; virtues of a small business so often become. the vices of a large Business? Why do some~business men’ slow down ard become tim{a routineers in tle second half of thelr careers? Why have so many big! business men elther failed or had the control of thelr ‘businesses taken away” from them during the past five years? Haye some! of the ‘qualities, that made the great business sticcese¢s of the past’ become obsolete?, Is Napoleanism in business out of date? If so/ who willbe the patron saint of big business inthe future? ‘As I look’ back over my experience T can s¢e the raw materials for an- swers to many questfons like, these. T believe that the modern business system will be_ both the inspiration and the instrument of ‘the soctal progress of ‘the, future. ‘The modern business system is at present. more or less lawless. Bust: Old-Oaken Bucket pal By Samuel Woodworth. How dear to my. heart are the’scenes éf-my childhood, When, fond recollections present them to view!" The orchard, the ‘meadow, the deep tangled wildwood, And eyery loved spot which my, Infancy Knew: ‘The wide-spreading pond’ and the mill that stood by tt, The bridge and- the ‘rock: where the cataract’ fell; $ The cot of my father, the -dairy house nigh tt, : And e’en the rude bucket that hung-in. the ‘well. ‘That. moss-covered bucket I> hatled as a treasure, For often at noon, when returned from the field T found ft the source of an exquisite pleasure, purest and sweetest nature can yleld. How ardent I seized it, with hands that were ‘glowing, And quick to the white-pebbled bottom {t fell. Then soon, with the emblem of truth overflowing,... . . And dripping , with coolness, ft rose from the well. The that How sweet ftom the green mossy brim to’ receive it, | ‘As, poised on the curb, it inclined to my~ lips! : Not a’ full. blushing goblet tempt me_to leaye it, Tho filled’ with, the, nectar that Jupiter sips. ; And now, far removed from the loved habitation, The tear of regret will intrusively swell, fancy reyerte ‘to| my’ father’s Diantation, | And sighs for the bucket that | hung fin: the’ well. could As and {ts bellef in’ advertist: city, of 10,000 people has pleted, a ‘campaign’ for advertising and Chamber of. Commerce work that has broken’ the: world records on a pericapita bas{s. Starting out \to thorease {ts income from $5,000 | to $50,000, {t rained in’ a great com- munity campaign °$87,000, and the city voted. an: additional § $20,000, making the grand total $107,000. Also the county haa provided $15,000 tor county advertising. . Practically all of these funds willsbe;spent by Januaty ‘Ist in aflvertising the ad- vantages. of, Sanford and Seminole he advertising will be handled ‘by known advertising ‘been doing the bulk of community advertising work on the east coast “Belteving that the spectacular re sults of our efforts here would -be of interest to you; we have sent this out: to ‘a portion “of "the "newspaper fraternity,” y ESSN | Dr, M, C. Keith moved to rooms 7, 8, 9, 10 Stockmen’s "National Bank | Buildin, appropriaiton a nationally of eve prevent his liv WHAT IS A BUSINESS MAN? ness men, years Business will Round Steak, Ib._____ pl Sirloin Steak, lb._-.____ T-Bone Steak, Ib. if Short Cuts, lb Cor. H. and Durbin 25¢ Lard, Ib..-___ ~------..25¢, 2 lbs. 45¢ Fresh Dressed Hens, lb.-___ Fresh Dressed Springers, lb__.--_36c Fresh Dressed Broilers, lb.__-----38¢ NOTICE TO RANCHERS—WE WILL PAY YOU MARKET PRICE FOR DRESSED BEEF, PORK, VEAL, POULTRY AND EGGS - THE NORRIS CO OFFICE AND PLANT Phone 12 will ‘odnet. The details appear in in order to survive and succeed, will be compelled to adopt) the sort. of policies that will give us an increasingly better social order. Social progress d: y man, woman and chiid to a decently adequate supply of the necessities of life, and the release of the individual from the things that 4g a creative and con nds in the United States. will depend | tented life. upon His’ seein gthese changes in Coming conditions are advance of their coming. compel business. men changes in policy and in action that will result In just these things. Tam _ not slinging mud at the bus ness.man of the past. I’ have a ver solid respect for the. much- phrase “business is business whole idea is that good socta! cles are the “sufest recipe and continuous profits. The ‘policies that will enable men to make the big business successes of the next ten or twenty progress as’a by! of this coming change I cuss In a t Note—These most important ‘portions of Mr. Fil- ene’s book, “The Way Out,” which is being widely country and E series Politic produ er article. articles c discussed “in rope. The nex* fn the Is Bet Ww Ba coreal. Sho Shoulder Steak, 1b,----_--__ Plate Boil.__-------------3 Ibs. 25¢ Bot Roast, |b.cev neon = 12'4c-15c¢ Prime Rib Roll, Ib,------------ ~22c Veal Shoulder Roast, Ib..------ 17\4ye Veal Shoulder Steak, Ib.--..---_-_20c this start the day right! and sold everywhere. Oven-fresh ALWAYS Kellogg's patented inner-realed wartite Goy their money value, than ever before. the access terms with countries in going to to make and labor costs. the determining factor. is determined by amount and the quality of the worker wuges he i receives. tor, big out are not far costs in Eure For the superidri tion “y ce social shall dis. course, are his higher standard of living and his greater ambition due over the|to the larger opportunities enjoyed himself and his family. But per- s the principal cause 1s the re- this | markable mechanical progress, the ‘Than news: ter ery in American tbe ly pr crisp flake is chock-full of flavor supreme! Tomorrow, for breakfast; a Havor surprise, a flavor feast —a big, happy serving of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes—a pitcher of milk or cream— perhaps, fresh or preserved fruit too! Just the ticket to Served 9 CORN FLAKES ‘« challenge the World! that wonderful only in Kelli Flakes. dy- at know why me demand Kellogg's. Meats ard Provisions d WHOLESALE—RET PRICES GOOD FOR CO. IL ING WEEK ulder Round Steak, Ib. Fresh Fish and Poultry Every Day Buy Dolds’ Ni gara Hams and Bacon 426 BRANCH MARKET East Second In World Markets rnment statistics show that, except for the period of the world war, the foreign trade of Ahe United States, in both volume of goods and is now larger That condition contradicts the frequently expressed fears of those who did not see how this country could compete on evn which wages are from one-fifth to one-third | of those paid to American workers. The mistake in their reasoning is in regard to what constitutes wages What the laborer j receives for his day's work {fs not Labor cost welghing goods produces against the Consequently labor costs in this country after all of line with labor of the produc the Afherican worker there are many reasons, among which, of development of labor-saving machin- manufaeture. | Workers wh» receive from $5 to $12 | ductive if bed and into Kellogg’s! Boy! Whata breakfast! Each crackly Phone 2540 thelr employers are to profit. The necessity of making thelr employ: ment profitable has stimulated American inventiveness and the de- velopment of labor-saving tool. and implements has progressed to a de. gree not known elsewhere. Another important factor In America's foreign-trade Is, of course the size of the home market. ‘This country is so much more populous tha: are competing manufacturing countries and its power of consump- tion is so great that it can attain a yast volume of output, and conse quently chedpness of production, simply by supplying the domestic demand. American industry 1s not base¢ on foreign markets, but on domestic consumption. On that alone it is able to build factories that produce goods on a scale not attainable in competing countrie~ + Further, Eurc n wages are ris- ing. As fast as old-world manufac- trrers improve thelr methods, and therefore thelr profits, they are ob- liged to share the benefit with their workers the Dear Mr. Motorist: son history. of dollars of its price. to demonstrate. IT WILL PAY YOU TO | READ THIS | Being the world’s largest bt i der cars permits Hudson to give the greatest price advantage, with the finest quality in Hud- Everywhere it is called “The World’s Great- est Buy” because it iy universally acknowledged that no car gives like quality, reliability, per- formance and fine appearance within hundreds which the praise of a vast ownership has made famous, consists not only in the important first cost savings, but also in the way Hudsons retain | their new car qualities and performance in long | service with little need for mechanical attention. We know that any comparison can only em- phasize the advantages in price and quality that Hudson holds, and we welcome the opportunity Yours very truly. ON ANY OF THE FOLLOWING Electric Washer UNIVERSAL, WESTERN ELECTRIC AND WOODROWS All Standard, Well Known Makes and ‘PRICED RIGHT We extend to you a cordial invitation to try any of these wonderful labor savers in your own home, Purchase on Easy Terms if You So Desire Mountain States Power Co. Formerly Natrona Power Co. PHONE 69 PHONE 949 So you'll have it when yeu really need it. weather comes, everybody wants his coal—and you can’t tell how long you'll have to wait for your supply. Make sure of having it by ordering now from The ORIGINAL Malted Milk Contains the valuable muscle and bone forming elements found n the grain and whole milk. Raises happy; robust children. Nutritious and easily assimilated. Prepared at home by stirring the pow- fer in hot or cold water. No cooking, pan NST a goa a Tribune Classt- For results try ders of 6-cylin- And Hudson economy, When cold Natrona Transfer Storage and Fuel Co. : JOHN L. BIEDERMANN, President Beech and C Streets

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